My four-part WordPerfect Lawyer feature is concluded by this post. It included links to great sources of WordPerfect help, with hours of reading material, and lots of free downloadable macros. I probably didn’t discuss WP templates enough, so do not forget these powerful tools.

Is WordPerfect a viable option for the future for lawyers? Well,

One can generate extremely useful WordPerfect macros simply by recording them. But even more power can be unlocked by learning how to create them yourself. Everyone in the office need not learn this skill. Your resident WordPerfect Guru can create them and the rest of you can just enjoy running the macros. Of course, you

What happened to WordPerfect to relegate it to a niche product primarily used by lawyers and some government officials? In a word, Microsoft happened.

The primary reason given by law firms for conversion from WordPerfect to MS Word is that their clients wanted documents in MS Word format, not WordPerfect. In many cases, that was

Are you a WordPerfect lawyer in a Word world? You are not alone.

Texas attorney Craig Ball was doing a tips program with me and several others at our 2004 OBA Solo and Small Firm Conference. I gave a WordPerfect tip and he said “Now, how many people are still using WordPerfect?” Taking the bait

Do you still receive e-mails with broken links? The sender wants to direct you to a website, but you click and get an error message, only noticing afterwards that part of the web address (URL) is not highlighted as hypertext. Veteran Net users know how to work around this problem. Novices usually give up. Let’s

I’ll admit to being a proud WordPerfect user. But I know many of you readers now use MS Word. When I used Word, one of the things I didn’t like was the lack of the path and filename on the top of my display as is done with WordPerfect. I mentioned this to Oklahoma City